The parliamentary team of the Socialist Union Party in the House of Representatives has announced the suspension of any coordination on the motion of censure with other opposition groups. In a statement, they cited the absence of a «genuine and sincere will to bring the initiative to fruition». The statement added that some opposition members preferred «to focus on personal and technical details unrelated to the agreed political and parliamentary norms». The Socialist team affirmed that they «did not sense any real desire to advance the motion of censure», but rather an insistence on bogging down the initiative with repeated formalities at every meeting. The statement also highlighted that «some» actors have been «undermining the initiative through media leaks serving their own agendas, aiming to mislead public opinion, while drowning the process in procrastination and wasting political time—far from the ethics of coordination and responsible deliberation among opposition parties». The party and its parliamentary team acknowledged that the opposition lacks an absolute majority in the House of Representatives and therefore the motion is unlikely to be approved, preventing it from compelling the government to submit its collective resignation. Article 105 of the constitution stipulates that the House of Representatives can force the government to resign by approving a motion of censure. Such a motion requires the signatures of at least one-fifth of council members. The council's office then sets a date for debate, and approval requires a majority vote in favor. Morocco's political history records only two attempts at motions of censure: in 1964 and 1990, neither of which succeeded in toppling the government.